Table 1.
Maternity model of care categories and definitions and their relationship to the current Maternity Care Classification System (MaCCS) in Australia [5, 18].
Table 2.
Maternity model of care definitions in the current study and their relationship to the current Maternity Care Classification System (MaCCs) in Australia [18].
Table 3.
Sociodemographic, reproductive history, and index birth characteristics by maternity model of care.
Table 4.
Adjusted odds ratios for obstetric interventions and maternal and infant health outcomes by maternity model of care, adjusting for (i) sociodemographic characteristics, reproductive history, and (ii) with additional adjustment for relevant clinical covariates.
Fig 1.
Adjusted odds* of maternal and infant outcomes significantly different to Standard Public Care#.
Green indicates improved outcomes, red indicates poorer outcomes and blue indicates outcomes with differential value dependent on consumer needs and preferences.
Table 5.
Adjusted odds ratios for information provision and decision-making by maternity model of care, adjusting for (i) sociodemographic characteristics, reproductive history, and (ii) with additional adjustment for relevant clinical covariates.
Table 6.
Adjusted odds ratios for maternal experiences during pregnancy, labour/birth, and postpartum care by maternity model of care, adjusting for (i) sociodemographic characteristics, reproductive history, and (ii) with additional adjustment for relevant clinical covariates.
Table 7.
Adjusted odds ratios for maternal experiences of interpersonal quality of care by maternity model of care, adjusting for (i) sociodemographic characteristics, reproductive history, and (ii) with additional adjustment for relevant clinical covariates.
Fig 2.
Adjusted odds*# of maternal experiences significantly different to Standard Public Care∞.
Green indicates more optimal experiences, red indicates less optimal experiences and blue indicates experiences with differential value dependent on consumer needs and preferences.